economy

Pre-Season Snowboard Orders Plunge 30%

Tight credit and current inventory blamed for sluggish pre-season snow orders.

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mike lewis

FUTURE SHRED: The Equation For A New Generation

Building Snowboarding’s Base Through Exposure, Conversion, Retention, & Diversification

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mike lewis

Recent Survey Reveals Leading Cost Reduction Measures In U.S. Companies

A recent survey conducted by Chicago’s Challenger, Gray & Christmas sheds some insight on what companies in the United States are doing to cut expenses due to the current economic crisis. According to the survey, the number one way companies are reducing costs is through cutting travel expenses (66.7%), followed by hiring freeze/ reduction (57.8%), and—sadly— coming in third is permanent layoffs (55.6%).

Here are the full results:

Check out the entire survey here

josh hunter

ECONOMIC UNCERTAINTY AFFECTS MOUNTAIN RESERVATIONS


Denver, Colo., Nov. 18, 2008—Data released yesterday by the Mountain Travel Research Program (MTRiP) indicated that the ongoing bad economic news during the month of October had a negative effect on consumer confidence with a drop by 36.5 percent– reaching its lowest level since being established in 1985.  The data revealed that winter reservations are down 13 percent overall and reservations taken in October are down 22.4 percent with both figures down from September levels. New reservation volume held up well but was offset by cancellations that occurred when final payments were due and the sales were not consummated, particularly for reservations in early season, including Thanksgiving and Christmas holiday periods.
The October Mountain Travel Monitor noted that in addition to the drop in consumer confidence, the financial markets have remained volatile and the recent legislation to stimulate the economy has yet to find any measurable influence on consumer spending.  Retail sales dropped 2.8 percent during the month and eclipsed the previous biggest decline in sales of 2.65 percent recorded in November 2001.  Although the Monitor also reported that the credit crunch is easing a bit as evidenced in indexes such as the LIPOR, it doesn’t appear to have had a positive impact on consumers yet.
Other key issues influencing the mountain travel booking trends are the world economy and transportation costs.  In today’s global economy, most nations are co-dependent and the collapse of financial institutions in major international markets is having an impact on the U.S. dollar and other currencies.  These dramatic downturns in other nations have led to an increase in the value of the dollar which makes the previously favorable exchange rate for a U.S vacation by international visitors less affordable and attractive.
The report also observed that transportation costs have been a bright spot in the economic picture as the price of oil has dropped radically in a short period of time with prices stabilizing around $60/barrel and pump prices averaging around $2.38 gallon and even less in many markets.  This has led to a decrease in air travel costs and airlines have apparently, at this time, eased away from their previously aggressive position to increase pricing.  If this trend continues, air transportation could become more affordable and lower prices may provide an incentive for skiers and riders to book a winter vacation.
“Unfortunately, all of the bad news in October may be causing some historically resilient guests to remain on the sidelines by deferring their decision to make reservations or by generating increased cancellations,” said Ralf Garrison, author of the Mountain Travel Monitor Report. “Discretionary spending was the fuel that funded leisure travel in recent years but the phase is practically an oxymoron these days as cautious consumers curb their spending,” he added.

Implications for the Mountain Resort Industry

Garrison’s report observed that the uncertainty facing consumers will likely have several outcomes for mountain destinations this winter:
-A significant number of past guests that typically stayed for 5-7 nights have not made reservations and are unlikely to book until either the current economic conditions stabilize or resorts develop and promote compelling offers to attract visitors to the mountains.
-Resorts and lodging properties may have to shift their focus to potential guests in close-in markets or “one tank guests.”  These potential visitors can react on short notice to last minute opportunities surrounding Thanksgiving and Christmas holidays.  “This ‘Epicenter Effect’ may provide an important ‘fill-in’ opportunity for lodging properties that re-focus on skiers and riders who are relatively close and more likely and able to react to offers and packages that can help fill beds and chairlifts,” claims Garrison.
-Mountain resorts may need to react to competitive pricing already being aggressively promoted by both the cruise and gaming industries that are offering deep discounts.  As this competition increases, consumers expectations for a deal will increase—particularly in lodging since this is the vacation component that has experienced the greatest price increase in recent years.
Although the influence of snowfall can be considerable, its ability to “trump” consumer confidence and recessionary forces is uncertain. Historical data for skier visits supports this theory but its positive impact may not apply equally to all segments of the market.  Local season pass holders can and do react to abundant snow on very short notice without incurring any additional expenses. However, destination guests often book well in advance based on schedules and pricing, and these guests are often much less responsive to snowfall as the winning trump card.
“In a recent informal poll of un-booked destination guests who typically spend considerably more on their vacation than day skiers and season pass holders, they were much more concerned about economic factors than snow conditions,” said Garrison.  “In fact, they  considered good snow conditions a ‘given’ so heavy snowfall may not deliver the influx of visitors that many resorts of come to expect in good snow years,” he cautioned.
In assessing the situation in the Mountain Travel Monitor, Garrison concluded that “it probably isn’t wise for mountain resorts and lodging properties to depend on Mother Nature for fiscal security, viability, and stability.”

Press Release

Catching Up With: Dick Baker, Chairman Emeritus of SIMA

If there’s one thing I’ve learned while covering the business side of boardsports it’s that when Dick Baker speaks, you listen. Baker is a veteran of the apparel business. His career spans from Esprit, Lacoste, and Tommy Hilfiger to Op. His opinions are highly respected both in and outside the boardsports industry, just as he is. I had the opportunity to ask Baker a few questions this morning about the current economic climate and how it’s affecting the endemic market. Here’s what he had to say.

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josh hunter

Snow Season Industry Outlook

SIA makes the case that snow sports are more closely tied to weather than economic trends, and shares some realistic perspectives from major industry sectors.

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mike lewis

Snow More Important Than Stocks For Rider Visits

According to an article in the Summit Daily News:

SUMMIT COUNTY — While the gloomy economic news doesn’t seem to end these days, ski industry experts are still optimistic about the upcoming season, provided there’s plenty of powder.

Looking at trends for the past 19 years, RRC Associates president Nolan Rosall said statistics show that skier and snowboard visits have been more dominated by snow quality, temperatures and timing of snowfall than by economic factors or consumer confidence.

Rosall’s Boulder-based research firm plotted four lines on a graph, overlaying recessionary periods with a national snowfall index, a consumer confidence measure and skier visit numbers.

The resulting picture suggests that, even when times are tough, skier visits can stay high in good snow years. The textbook case is the winter of 1981-1982, when skier visits soared to record levels despite a deep recession.

Poor snow this winter, however, could lead to a double whammy for ski resorts.
“It’s easy for people to cancel plans for a ski vacation if the snow and the economy are bad,” Rosall said. Poor snow becomes the scapegoat for canceling a ski trip, he said.

This season will represent a unique test in how effective the industry has been in creating dedicated participants, he said. The increasingly unstable world economy reinforces the need to build a strong domestic visitation base, he added.

The only big question is whether the current economic decline is in the same ballpark with past dips — or whether the current credit crisis and stock market crash will lead to unprecedented economic territory.

Rosall said that, based on tangible measures like unemployment figures and stock market values, the current economic situation is “within the realm of other recessions.”

The statistics released late last week in a special report for the National Ski Areas Association uses a consumer confidence yardstick as measure of the economy.
“It’s a psychological measure,” Rosall said. “But we can make a valid comparison.”
Breckenridge Ski Area vice president and chief operating officer Lucy Kay said the RRC report would help her plan for the upcoming season.

“We’re optimistic that people are still going to want to go on vacation and that they will find a way,” Kay said. Flexibility to respond to short-term changes, both in the economy and the weather, is the key to a successful season, she added.

Press Release

NSAA Predicts Economic Impacts Upon Ski Season Are Likely To Be Muted

Lakewood, CO - A report prepared for the National Ski Areas Association (NSAA) concludes that the effects of the current economic downturn upon ski season visitation will be limited this year, unless well below-normal snowfall affects many regions of the U.S.

The report, prepared for the NSAA by RRC Associates, looks at two potential scenarios: a weak economy with sustainable snowfall, and a weak economy with erratic snowfall. The report shows that over the past 20 years, skier and snowboarder visitation is much more aligned with snowfall patterns than with economic conditions.

“When snow is good, it trumps bad consumer confidence and recessionary forces,” author Nolan Rosall wrote in his report to the NSAA. “The most obvious example of a season that looked like this was the 1981/82 season. The economy was in a

deep recession, consumer confidence was at historic lows, but the snow was fantastic and the industry rebounded from the disastrous 1980/81 season.”

Rosall did acknowledge that in times of high consumer confidence, confidence in snow conditions generally remained high as well, even when perceptions of erratic snowfall exist. When consumer confidence and snowfall are both low, Rosall wrote, “poor snow becomes the scapegoat for cancelling that trip or delaying booking to the last moment. The clearest historical example of this pattern is the contrast between the 1989/90 season and the 1990/91 season. During the 1989/90 season consumer confidence was relatively high, but snow was relatively weak. While visitation was down significantly, the decline was not as severe as the downturn of observed in 1980/81 when consumer confidence was much lower. Just after the 1989/90 season the economy entered a recessionary period, consumer confidence plummeted, and on aggregate, snowfall wasn’t great that winter. The result was the second worst season on record and a total of 46.7 million visits.”

Rosall’s report did not consider the effects of an economic recovery, as the current situation has already set the tone for the coming ski and snowboard season, he opines.

The report forecasts that skiers and snowboarders will stay closer to home this winter, opting to take more day trips to regional resorts than book extended destination visits. Thus the report predicts that isolated destination resorts, far from population centers, will experience the most dramatic impact of the current economic climate.

Press Release

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